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Histology of inflamed lesions

Понедельник, 05 Января 2009 г. 21:11 + в цитатник

The major dermatological textbooks give contradictory statements about the initial events of acne inflammation. Until 1987 the lymphocyte was usually reported to be the initial inflammatory cell.

Strauss and Pochi stressed the importance of the lymphoid series in lesions aged about 2-7 days.4 They describe how the early inflammatory changes are of two types, both of which involve rupture of follicular structures. In the first type of inflammatory lesion, small areas of rupture occur in the follicular wall of normal-appearing sebaceous follicles..

This type of change may actually be seen in the normal individual and, in this instance, presumably heals without further progression. However, in the second type of inflamed lesions, the rupture is generally more extensive and may lead to complete follicular collapse and the formation of an inflammatory pustule.

These authors emphasize that the onset of inflammation is often at the site of a closed comedo, where the initial change leading to inflammation is a small rupture in the wall of the comedo. Adjacent to the area of rupture in both types of lesions is a lymphocytic infiltrate in the dermis. Bacterial stains of histological sections of the small microscopic breaks did not show any bacteria in this region..

However, the role of polymorphonucleocytes in the early acne inflammatory phase was emphasized by Kligman who observed that microscopic rupture of the sebaceous follicle is the event that precedes the clinical inflammatory lesion.6 At times he identified invasion of 'intact' follicular epithelium by neutrophils which could also be identified in the lumen of the follicles at these points, suggesting increased permeability of the duct epithelium.

This implies that there are chemotactic factor activators or direct chemotactic factors which leak out of microscopically intact follicles and attract neutrophils into the site. This author's department would emphasize, from their own data, that chemoattraction of polymorphs is an important factor but that in many early lesions chemoattraction for lymphoid cells is more relevant..

Subsequent to Kligman's publication6 the idea that polymorphonucleocytes are the initiating inflammatory cells, many dermatologists have accepted this as fact. This author's department therefore thought it necessary to reinvestigate the problem7 and ask two questions. What is the initial inflammatory cell and is duct rupture necessary for the development of inflammation? Sixtynine early inflamed lesions have been investigated..

Periductal focal infiltrate was less frequently seen than a perivascular infiltrate. The polymorphonucleocytes were maximally seen at sixty-seven hours duration, and were more evident when there was disruption of the duct wall. This dichotomy of distribution is not readily explained. Intraductal polymorphonucleocytes were an almost universal feature of pustules..

In active papules and nodules greater damage of the duct and gland is evident as are macrophages and giant cells.

Dermatologists frequently tell students and general practitioners that disruption of the follicular wall is an early feature of acne inflammation. However, in the investigation of this author's department of timed biopsies, disruption of the duct wall was seen in only 14 per cent at six hours and in 18 per cent at seventy-two hours..

Inflamed lesions were associated most often with obvious distension of the pilosebaceous duct but 8 per cent were not obviously distended. In 9 per cent of the lesions there was a definite whitehead, in 27 per cent a definite blackhead, but in 52 per cent the inflamed lesion arose at the site of a microcomedone..

Table 13.4 shows that in the early lesions there is neither spongiosis nor duct rupture in 67 per cent. In only 39 per cent of three-day-old inflamed lesions was there partial or complete destruction of the duct wall. Even at three days 33 per cent of the inflamed lesions show little damage to the duct wall..

Thus, the development of an early inflamed lesion does not depend on the presence of duct rupture (and/or a clinically obvious comedone). It is also clear that the initial cell in acne inflammation is the lymphocyte and not the polymorphonucleocyte. Monoclonal antibody stain showed the lymphocytes to be predominantly T helper cells.

The number of each subset of lymphocytes was in keeping with a normal response to antigens and not a disturbance of the immune status..

Thus, these data suggest that in the development of early inflamed lesions the inflammation is due to the diffusion of small molecular weight substances from the duct to produce chemoattraction, initially for lymphocytes and subsequently for polymorphonucleocytes.

Macules deserve special reference since they are rarely mentioned in other texts and yet they are the end result of most inflamed lesions and, at times, contribute considerably to the patient's symptomatology. They can last 2-48 days. Histology reveals a nonspecific inflammatory reaction centred around the blood vessels and follicles.

The extent of the inflammation and structural damage to the duct depends upon the initial severity of the preceding inflammatory lesion. The cellular infiltrate is predominantly lymphocytic and histiocytic: some giant cells may be seen..

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Histology of inflamed lesions .-::79532::-.


 

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